Rice, who owns virtually every major career receiving record, didnβt just set the standard at his position. βArguably,β DeBartolo said, βheβs probably the greatest football player that ever played the game.β
Another man who has been described in those terms, Hall of Fame quarterback Joe Montana, remembers Riceβs raw beginning in San Francisco after coach and franchise architect Bill Walsh traded up to snag the former Mississippi Valley State receiver with the 16th overall pick of the β85 NFL draft.
During Riceβs rookie season, he struggled with a steady succession of dropped passes, and fans were questioning whether Walsh had made a sound decision. Then, in a late-season Monday night game against the Los Angeles Rams at Candlestick Park, Rice caught 10 passes for 241 yards to thrust himself into the public consciousness.
βAt that point,β Montana recalls, βeveryone sort of sat back and said, βWhoa.β β
Dwight Clark, who had been the Ninersβ top receiver for the first half of the decade, believes that breakout game was the confidence-booster Rice desperately needed.
βWe were never really that worried, because he kept showing flashes of brilliance,β Clark says. βWe just kept getting him going, saying, βItβs OK, man. Everybody does this.β Cause he was getting really down on himself.
βHe had a lot of adjusting to do. You come from Mississippi Valley State and they tell you to run a 10-yard hook, and itβs a 10-yard hook. With Bill Walsh, on a 10-yard hook you had 10 different options. After that Rams game, he really started getting into this unbelievably competitive thing. He wanted to take it to another level.β
Rice took his game to a level that may never be matched. In 20 seasons with the 49ers, Raiders and Seahawks (for whom he played his final 11 games as a 42-year-old), Rice caught 1,549 passes for 22,895 yards and 197 touchdowns β all records by a wide margin. No player has crossed the goal line more β Rice, with 10 rushing TDs, is the leagueβs all-time leader with 207 scores.
He has numerous postseason records as well, including an all-time best 22 touchdowns. Rice played in four Super Bowls β the last, with the Oakland Raiders, following the 2002 season β and had standout performances in each of them, winning MVP honors in Super Bowl XXIII.
Because Rice played with two Hall of Fame quarterbacks in San Francisco, Montana and Steve Young (and another league MVP, Rich Gannon, in Oakland), some, including former 49ers teammate Terrell Owens(notes), have suggested that his productivity was a product of his environment. Itβs a specious argument for anyone who paid close attention to Riceβs career and his mastery of virtually every nuance of his craft. Not surprisingly, it drives DeBartolo nuts.
βI read about Owens saying he wouldβve broken all these records if he wouldβve had Montana and Young instead of [Tony] Romo,β said DeBartolo, who previously served as Bill Walsh (β93), Joe Montana (β00) and Fred Deanβs (β08) Hall of Fame presenters. βLet me tell you something β Jerry Rice couldβve broken records if I was the quarterback. Jerry Rice wouldβve excelled on any team. Itβs not even worth arguing.β
Riceβs post-football ventures include a business association with the sports agency that DeBartolo owns. Not surprisingly, DeBartolo says Riceβs work ethic and insistence on excellence continue to stand out.
Source: Some files from Yahoo Sports
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